Quality improvement sustainability to decrease utilization drift for therapeutic hypothermia in the NICU

Author:

Kieffer Hannah1,Carlton Katherine2,Adams Samuel3,Jozwik Jenna3,Cabacungan Erwin4,Cohen Susan S.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Medical College of Wisconsin , Milwaukee , WI , USA

2. Medical College of Wisconsin Affiliated Hospitals , Medical College of Wisconsin , Milwaukee , WI , USA

3. Department of Neurology , Medical College of Wisconsin , Milwaukee , WI , USA

4. Department of Pediatrics , Medical College of Wisconsin , Milwaukee , WI , USA

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Therapeutic hypothermia (TH) is now standard of care for the neuroprotection of patients with moderate to severe hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE). TH misuse results in increased medical complication rates and high health care resource utilization. Quality improvement (QI) methodology can address drift from clinical guidelines. Assessment of sustainability of any intervention over time is an integral part of the QI methodology. Methods Our prior QI intervention improved medical documentation using an electronic medical record-smart phrase (EMR-SP) and demonstrated special cause variation. This study serves as Epoch 3 and investigates the sustainability of our QI methods to decrease TH misuse. Results A total of 64 patients met the diagnostic criteria for HIE. Over the study period, 50 patients were treated with TH, and 33 cases (66%) used TH appropriately. The number of appropriate TH cases between cases of misuse increased to an average of 9 in Epoch 3 from 1.9 in Epoch 2. Of the 50 cases, 34 (68%) had EMR-SP documentation included. Length of stay and TH complication rates did not vary between cases of TH misuse and appropriate TH use. Conclusions Our study confirmed a sustained decrease in TH misuse, despite inconsistent use of EMR-SP. We speculate that culture change involving increased awareness of guidelines through education may have contributed more to a lasting change.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynecology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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